Remarks by Director General of the OECS, Dr. Didacus Jules at the CARICOM-UN High Level Pledging Conference

Since the path breaking publication in 1973 by Schumacher the notion of small being beautiful achieved a certain prominence but the complexity of what being small means has not been fully explored in all of its ramifications.

The existential challenge of smallness is the contradiction of opportunity coexisting with vulnerability. On the one hand, smallness provides the scale ideal for beta testing innovation and integrated ecological solutions to the dilemmas of human civilization. Small size makes experimentation manageable on all fronts, whether they be cost or efficiency, allowing the latitude for mid-stream adjustments and changes. But producing scalable solutions.

On the other hand, at the core of the DNA of smallness is the reality of vulnerability. The vulnerability of small states is inversely proportional to size because the mathematics of disaster does not move the human conscience as it does when struck on a larger stage.

This is what has brought us here today but we would fail to appreciate the true magnitude of the pain of that hurricane season if we do not scale the experience to globally significant figures.

Six (6) category 3 to 5 hurricanes traversing the region in 2017 represent a terrifying escalation of catastrophe in our small space;

Ten Caribbean countries including five OECS member states directly and profoundly impacted by the most dangerous of these hurricanes.

That we are small does not make us insignificant; that we are insular does not make us isolated. The size and scale of our destruction, damage and loss in this season of pain may not be readily appreciated by those who are bigger and richer. But perhaps if we scale up our loss to your parameters you will grasp the comparative magnitude of our pain:

29 lives were lost in Dominica with a population of 70,000. Every life matters but if this hurricane was visited on India, the corresponding scale of lives lost would have been 3.2 million souls!

More than 30 persons are still missing from Hurricane Maria. Scaled to Japan, this would have been the equivalent of 292,100 missing persons

The estimated damage and losses in Dominica 1.3 billion US dollars or 200% percent of GDP, would equate to US$5.6 trillion had this been the United Kingdom

Every one of the 1,400 inhabitants of Barbuda had to be evacuated. Had this storm hit Florida with the same results as Barbuda, this could have meant the evacuation of all 20.6 million Florida residents.

Maybe we are overdramatizing the reality but human tragedy on any scale is tragedy despite the numbers, nationalities, or ethnicities. The narrative would have been different had the same pain been inflicted with equal intensity and scale in any more populous, or wealthier jurisdiction.

Our challenge is not only climate-change fueled hurricanes but also in the longer term, other equally damaging implications such as sea level rise, coral bleaching, severe drought etc.

All of the regional organizations present: CARICOM as well as OECS, stand ready and able to fulfil their responsibilities within their respective remits to changing the Caribbean development narrative.

For this event to be successful Mr. Chairman, it needs to embrace the commitments and the aspirations that our leaders have been articulating – the creation of resilient states. This is not simply about infrastructural reconstruction to higher and better standards; it is ultimately about this crisis giving birth to a new development paradigm in which the promise of smallness provides a light to a new path of human civilization that is respectful of nature. A new development pathway that is sustainable, equitable, resilient, that ushers in the new era of human civilization.

About The Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States

The Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) is an International Organisation dedicated to economic harmonisation and integration, protection of human and legal rights, and the encouragement of good governance among independent and non-independent countries in the Eastern Caribbean. The OECS came into being on June 18th 1981, when seven Eastern Caribbean countries signed a treaty agreeing to cooperate with each other while promoting unity and solidarity among its Members. The Treaty became known as the Treaty of Basseterre, so named in honour of the capital city of St. Kitts and Nevis where it was signed. The OECS today, currently has eleven members, spread across the Eastern Caribbean comprising Antigua and Barbuda, Commonwealth of Dominica, Grenada, Montserrat, St. Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, St Vincent and The Grenadines, British Virgin Islands, Anguilla, Martinique and Guadeloupe.